On Wed, Mar 10, 2004 at 11:51:37AM -0800, Bevan C. Bennett wrote: > Matthew Saltzman wrote: > >On Tue, 9 Mar 2004, Bevan C. Bennett wrote: > >>fred smith wrote: > >>>On Tue, Mar 09, 2004 at 11:58:36AM -0800, Bevan C. Bennett wrote: > >>>>Ben Steeves wrote: > >>>>>On Tue, 2004-03-09 at 15:41, Colin Burgess wrote: > >>>>>>What are people using to access a serial port? > >>>>>Kermit. The be-all-end-all of serial comms packages. I use it to talk > >>>>>to the Lights-Out-Management consoles on our Sun boxes and the L1 on > >>>>>our > >>>>>SGI box (it's a cheapie... no L2). > >>>>They have kermit again?! Yay! I thought I was stuck with minicom... > >>>>Sweet familiar kermit... the serial port's long lost friend. > >>>When have we ever been without it? One could always go to the kermit > >>>web site and grab the source for c-kermit, which has pretty much always > >>>built on Linux. (and nearly every other unix-like box, too!) > >>There was a period of time that (to my knowledge) it just vanished from > >>Redhat. I tried keeping up with compiling it for a little while, but > >>then I had a number of years during which I didn't need it. When I did > >>need it again, I couldn't find it and all the docs said to use minicom, > >>so I (erroneously, it appears) wrote it off and consigned myself to > >>minicom. > >>Suns have (and still do) use 'tip' instead. > >$ whichcd kermit > >You appear to be running Fedora Core 1. > >I'll search for rpms for that version. > >Searching for kermit... > > > >CD-3:ckermit-8.0.209-4.i386.rpm > >SOURCE-CD-3:ckermit-8.0.209-4.src.rpm > Yes, I know that now (it's even installed), but it wasn't to my > knowledge part of RH7 or RH8. It looks like it got added in RH9, but > without some announcement (or carefully reading through the entire > package list in my 'copious spare time') it went unnoticed (by me at > least) until now. For a while the kermit project had a restrictive license on the re-distribution of c-kermit (basically you had to have a license, and that cost money). During that period, the linux distributors couldn't distribute it. But it was always available at www.columbia.edu/kermit. More recently the fine folks at the Kermit project have modified the license tomake it permissible for free-software distributors to include it in their packages. > > I wanted to make a point of it because > 1) I find minicom slightly frustrating to use > 2) Others may have also not known of it's return The "return" is only a return to the linux distributions. kermit actually never went anywhere, has always been available from the kermit project for anyone who wanted to go get it. -- ---- Fred Smith -- fredex@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx ----------------------------- "Not everyone who says to me, 'Lord, Lord,' will enter the kingdom of heaven, but only he who does the will of my Father who is in heaven." ------------------------------ Matthew 7:21 (niv) -----------------------------
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